Vol 9, Issue 4

Effect of and Acute Bout of Kettlebell Exercise on Glucose Tolerance in Sedentary Men: a Preliminary Study

Authors

Samantha L. GreenwaldUniversity at Buffalo
Edward SegerUniversity at Buffalo
David NicholsUniversity at Buffalo
Andrew RayUniversity at Buffalo
Todd C. RideoutUniversity at Buffalo
Luc E. GosselinUniversity at Buffalo
International Journal of Exercise Science 9(4): 524-535, 2016.
DOI: 10.70252/XQJM4027

Abstract

Impaired glucose tolerance can have significant health consequences. The purposes of this preliminary study were to examine whether a single session of kettlebell exercise improves acute post-exercise glucose tolerance in sedentary individuals, and whether it was as effective as high-intensity interval running. Six sedentary male subjects underwent a two-hour oral glucose tolerance test following three different conditions: 1) control (no exercise); 2) kettlebell exercise (2 sets of 7 exercises, 15 repetitions per exercise with 30 seconds rest between each exercise); or 3) high-intensity interval running (10 one-minute intervals at a workload corresponding to 90% VO2max interspersed with one-minute active recovery periods). Blood glucose and insulin levels were measured before (0 minutes), and 60 and 120 minutes after glucose ingestion. Both kettlebell and high-intensity interval running exercise significantly lowered blood glucose 60 minutes after glucose ingestion compared with control. However, there was no significant difference in blood glucose between the two exercise conditions at any time point. In addition, there were no significant differences in insulin concentration between high intensity interval running, kettlebell, and control conditions at all time points. Results indicate that an acute bout of kettlebell exercise is as effective as high intensity interval running at improving glucose tolerance in sedentary young men.

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